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Post by ADMIN on Sept 20, 2019 17:42:36 GMT -5
These are your listening rooms.Here you'll find some basic audio files for reference. Any member that has a suggestion for other audio, please send a PM to the ADMIN It is is important for specific timepieces relating to actual evidence. JFK Boards makes no copyright, or ownership claim to these works. If you are the owner, or a legal representative of the owner, and do not want your content shared on this site, please email JFKBoards@mail.com to have the material immediately removed.
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:15:22 GMT -5
Debate Mark Lane vs. David Ball (December 4, 1964)
David Ball and another lawyer, David Belin, were assigned to determine the identity of Kennedy’s assassin.
About 10,000 pieces of paper were rolled into his office, including reports from the FBI, the Dallas police and sheriff, and the CIA. He and Belin spent their first month organizing the information and cataloging it on index cards. He later proposed procedures used by the entire staff, including field investigations and oral interrogation of key witnesses.
Ball wrote most of the controversial report, which concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the shooting of the president. [LA Times 9/23/2000]
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:15:51 GMT -5
Debate Mark Lane vs. Wesley Liebeler (January 25, 1967)
Wesley Jim Liebeler (May 9, 1931 – September 25, 2002), was an American law professor at the University of California and is especially known for his work at the Warren Commission in 1963 and 1964. He was married to Susan Liebeler.
Liebeler received a B.A. in 1953 from Macalester College and a Juris Doctor in 1957 from the University of Chicago Law School. In 1965 he joined the UCLA Law School, where he taught antitrust law for more than 30 years. In 1999 Liebeler joined George Mason’s School of Law and gave courses in antitrust and constitutional political economy law.
Liebeler was killed in a plane crash in 2002. [wiki]
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:16:21 GMT -5
Debate Mark Lane vs. Louis Nizer (Feb. 11 1967)
On February 11, 1967, KTTV-TV (Channel 11) in Los Angeles, California, aired this debate between lawyers Mark Lane and Louis Nizer. Albert Jenner,an assistant counsel member during the Warren Commission's 1964 investigation, also participated in the debate.
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:16:49 GMT -5
Mark Lane speaking at UCLA Dec. 03, 1964
Four weeks after the assassination of Kennedy on November 22, 1963, Lane published an article in the National Guardian dealing in-depth with 15 questions regarding statements by public officials about the murders of J. D. Tippit and John F. Kennedy from the perspective of a defense attorney. The statements were about the witnesses who claimed to have seen Oswald on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository; the paraffin test which, to Lane, indicated that Oswald had not fired a rifle recently; the conflicting claims about the rifle which at first was, as the police announced, a German Mauser and afterwards a World War II Mannlicher–Carcano; the Parkland Hospital doctors announcing an entrance wound in the throat, and the role of the FBI and the press, who convicted Oswald before his guilt was proven. [wiki]
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:17:16 GMT -5
Mark Lane speaking at UCLA Oct. 07, 1966
Lane questions, among other things, the Warren Commission conclusion that three shots were fired from the Texas School Book Depository and focuses on the witnesses who had recounted seeing or hearing shots coming from the grassy knoll in Dealey Plaza. Lane questions whether Oswald was guilty of the murder of policeman J.D. Tippit shortly after the Kennedy murder. Lane also states that none of the Warren Commission firearm experts were able to duplicate Oswald's shooting feat.[wiki]
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Post by Michael Capasse on Sept 29, 2019 16:17:51 GMT -5
Mark Lane Phone Interview with Helen Markham(1964)
This is an amazing tape from researcher, Denis Morissette. This is the phone call that started the Helen Markham controversy over the bushy haired man at the Tippit scene. At the time (July 1964), Mark Lane was threatened by the commission for not revealing his sources.
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Post by Michael Capasse on Mar 1, 2020 18:32:31 GMT -5
David Ferrie Interview tape 4/1/67
Researcher Denis Morissette found this incredible tape. A reading of a statement by David Ferrie. (1967, though not from Ferrie himself.)
Denis Morissette NARA sent me this. A friend who listened to the tapes at the National Archives said the label says, ""David Ferrie Interview tape from B.R. 4/1/67." Ferrie died earlier that year, so that cannot be Ferrie. Now, who is B.R.?
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